DocumentCode :
541029
Title :
Bridging the predictive and adaptive issues in air traffic management: the synchronous paradigm
Author :
Gawinowski, G. ; Duong, V. ; Nobel, J. ; Grau, J.Y. ; Dohy, D.
Volume :
1
fYear :
2003
fDate :
12-16 Oct. 2003
Abstract :
The SuperSector by R. Graham et al. (2002) project falls within the scope of research based on the hypothesis that the current proliferation of controlled sectors had led to a too rigid use of airspace to face with medium to long-term traffic growth. SuperSector suggests a shift of paradigm from sector-division to sector-regrouping, i.e. instead of subdividing sectors to accommodate traffic growth, SuperSector investigates a new control organization and practices from which traffic in large volume of airspace can be managed by teams of controllers with responsibilities no more restricted to sector-planning and radar-control but span from real-time traffic flow organization to conflict solving. In this way, it is expected that SuperSector can help filling the gap between long-term predictive issues of central flow management, and short-term adaptive issues of radar-control, and thus moving from an asynchronous air traffic management system to a synchronous one, from a sector-control working methods to a network and flow management one, from conflict-based control to a time-based control one. In this paper, we present the results obtained so far with SuperSector: a novel working organization based on a layered-planning mechanism and contract of services in order to perform medium-term anticipation linking the long-term predictive part of traffic flow capacity management and the short-term adaptive part of the air traffic control actions. The time-based approach and collaborative decision making mechanism associated to the contract are developed. Impacts on airspace design, flow planning and regulation, and tools are also discussed.
Keywords :
air traffic control; decision making; management; planning; real-time systems; SuperSector; air traffic control; air traffic management; airspace design; central flow management; collaborative decision making; flow planning; flow regulation; layered-planning mechanism; radar-control; real-time traffic flow; sector-planning; traffic flow capacity;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 2003. DASC '03. The 22nd
Conference_Location :
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7844-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/DASC.2003.1245871
Filename :
5731118
Link To Document :
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